
Music
The best kept secret in music
Press
This band has no press
Discography
The Damage 02 on Nuclear Blast
Photos
Feeling a bit camera shy
Bio
Impressed with the possibilities he heard for heavy music with the use of machines, Eric started writing music with a sequencer and sampler. Soon after, he recruited guitarist Steve Stegg and bassist Lou Louvenir to flesh out his dark, moody, new songs. Paying homage to the newfound creative freedom he felt in writing for this project, Eric dubbed the band "Tapping the Vein," a reference taken from the work of famed horror/gore scribe Clive Barker. After a short period of using sub-par male vocalists who werent bringin home the goods, the trio finally lucked out when a girl slight of frame but large of voice arrived for an audition. When she was through sonically kicking their ass across the rehearsal space, the girl, a.k.a. Heather Thompson was asked to join and proved to be the chemical catalyst needed to make the whole concoction explosive.
This line-up recorded a self-released EP (Butterfly) over a single weekend and started making the local rounds with shows. Unlike their previous projects, it became obvious from the first gig on that the audience was being blown away, immediately drawing people/fanatics/stalkers from all walks of the musical spectrum that eagerly anticipated each gig. Just when things were starting to take off, Steve and Lou decided to bow out due to family issues, but instead of packing it in, the remaining two members, Heather and Eric, decided to keep the momentum of the band going and searched out worthy successors. They found added musical firepower in the form of Joe Rolland, a versatile player and a veteran of the local Goth scene that Tapping the Vein shared an audience with. The other new jack being Mark Burkert, a classically trained guitarist who loved to play loud music. With the second line up in place, the band recorded a second self-financed EP (Undone).
Good things were happening for the quartet, including frequently being thought of to open for big national rock acts coming through town; these acts included Depeche Mode, Alanis Morrisette, The Sisters of Mercy, Switchblade Symphony, The Damned, Gravity Kills, Type O Negative and VAST. This proved to be instrumental in helping to spread the word about TTV, as Internet chatrooms full of converted fans from these shows drove scores of people to the bands web site and MP3.com page. This is easily evidenced by MP3.com, who recorded from November 2000 to January 2002, over 230,000 downloads of Tapping the Veins music. In fact, the band regularly receives glowing letters of praise from around the world, from people and places where they have never played, some who have even driven up to 20 hours away and flown cross-country to catch one of the bands gigs! I kid you not.
Links